Spoiled Student — Jadillica
Professors are forced to issue "incomplete" grades rather than F's. Courses are curved beyond recognition. When Jadillica complains that the 8:00 AM class is "too early for her mental health," the administration moves the class to 2:00 PM, inconveniencing 40 other students.
She doesn't want to learn philosophy; she wants to purchase a philosophy degree. When the store (the university) fails to deliver the product (the A-grade) easily, she asks for the manager (the Dean). Professors report that the Jadillica archetype has grown exponentially since 2015, correlating with the rise of rate-my-professor culture and the decline of in-person office hours. jadillica spoiled student
The TA wrote: "She literally said, 'I pay $80k a year to be spoken to like a princess, not like a peasant. Why would I read the textbook when I have an intuition for the subject?' She had a 14% in the class. Her intuition was wrong." Professors are forced to issue "incomplete" grades rather
When a university charges $60,000 a year, the student (or the parent paying the tuition) begins to view themselves as a customer . In a customer-service model, the customer is always right. Jadillica embodies the logical conclusion of this model. She doesn't want to learn philosophy; she wants